Charmian Clift’s Kalymnos: A new workshop for readers and writers

·

It was standing room only at Gleebooks on Sunday, May 12 when Charmian Clift fans and Kalymnian Australians gathered to hear biographer Nadia Wheatley talk about the connections between the Dodecanese island and Australian author Charmian Clift, who wrote her first solo book, Mermaid Singing, while living on Kalymnos in 1955.

In recent years, Kalymnians have been given back Clift’s account of their island and their culture through the book’s Greek translation — To Tragoudi tis Gorgonas (published by Metaichmio).

Crowd at Charmian Clift's Kalymnos. Gleebooks, (Effy Alexakis)
Crowd at Charmian Clift’s Kalymnos, Gleebooks. Photo: Effy Alexakis.

The title comes from the answer Clift gave to the islanders when they asked her why she and her family had come to Kalymnos. She told them that she was ‘looking for a mermaid.’  

“We were civilisation sick, asphalt and television sick,” she wrote in Mermaid Singing. “We had lost our beginnings and felt a sort of hollow that we had not been able to fill with material success. We had come to Kalymnos to seek a source, or a wonder, or a sign, to be reassured in our humanity.”

Kalymnos in 1955 was certainly a place to escape from the pressures of city life.

In that era, the island was still dependent on the sponge industry. Traditionally, the men went to sea in the week after Easter and were away for nine months, engaged in the perilous task of gathering sponges from the sea bed. Meanwhile the Kalymnian women ran the households.

Nadia Wheatley speaks at Charmian Clift's Kalymnos.Gleebooks, (Yannis Dramitinos)
Nadia Wheatley speaks at Charmian Clift’s Kalymnos, Gleebooks. Photo: Yannis Dramitinos.

Wheatley explained how Clift’s experience of the powerful matriarchal culture of the island gave her a model for her individual philosophy of feminism.

Clift’s mentor and friend on the island was an indomitable woman named Sevasti Taktikou.

Charmian Clift, George Johnston and Sevasti Taktikou, on Kalymnos, 1955. (Cedric Flower)
Charmian Clift, George Johnston and Sevasti Taktikou, on Kalymnos, 1955. Photo: Cedric Flower.

“As well as being what Charmian called “the household prop and stay,” the older Kalymnian woman taught the younger Australian woman to shop and cook and keep house in the local manner,” Nadia said. “And most importantly, Sevasti was the author’s cultural adviser.”

Fans of Clift are very keen to make cultural connections with Greece, so audience members were thrilled that the Consul General for Greece in Sydney, Yannis Mallikourtis, attended the event, and were deeply moved to hear him pay tribute to the significance of Charmian Clift’s story of Kalymnos as a way of connecting younger Greek Australians with their heritage. The Consul General spoke too of the role that Clift had played after her return to Australia, championing Greek democracy during the years of the Junta.

The Consul General for Greece, Yannis Mallikourtis, speaks at Charmian Clift's Kalymnos.Gleebooks, (Effy Alexakis)
The Consul General for Greece, Yannis Mallikourtis, speaks at Charmian Clift’s Kalymnos, Gleebooks. Photo: Effy Alexakis.

The event concluded with the launch of the program for Charmian Clift’s Kalymnos — A Workshop for Readers and Writers, which Wheatley will be conducting on the island of Kalymnos in April 2025. Over the course of a week, a small group of Clift readers will be visiting the places that inspired Charmian Clift’s travel memoir Mermaid Singing, and will be writing and publishing their own responses as a communal blog.

“I hope that this workshop will further the conversation between Kalymnos and the wider Australian community that Charmian Clift started so many years ago, with Mermaid Singing,” Wheatley said.

For more information contact: charmiancliftauthor@gmail.com

Advertisement

Share:

KEEP UP TO DATE WITH TGH

By subscribing you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

Advertisement

Latest News

The Greek Community of Melbourne Schools bids farewell to its graduating students

The Graduation Ceremony of the Class of 2025 of the Greek Community of Melbourne Schools took place on Saturday, 22 November.

Greek Orthodox Community of NSW commemorates Athens Polytechnic Uprising

On Sunday, 23 November 2025, the Greek Orthodox Community of New South Wales hosted a commemoration of the Athens Polytechnic Uprising.

‘We need to talk’: Greek Australian shares her story about ‘street angels, home devils’

Liana Papoutsis urges Greek Aussies to confront silence around family violence, reminding us that “tradition is no excuse” for bad behaviour.

Sydney’s Greek Orthodox community unites with Ukrainians to honour Holodomor victims

The Parish of Saint Savvas of Kalymnos in Banksia joined Ukrainians worldwide on November 23 to mark the 92nd anniversary of the Holodomor.

Mytilenian Brotherhood of Sydney set for annual cherry-picking weekend in Canberra

The Mytilenian Brotherhood of Sydney & NSW is gearing up for its much-loved Cherry Picking Weekend on Saturday 6 and Sunday 7 December 2025.

You May Also Like

Australian chain Lukumades makes US debut

Melbourne-based doughnut and coffee chain Lukumades has opened its first US outlet in Jacksonville Beach, Florida. 

Alex Hawke MP joins with Greek community to mark Orthodox Easter

Federal Immigration Minister, Alex Hawke MP, has issued a message to the Greek community ahead of Orthodox Easter this year.

Two Lesbos migrants shot after allegedly breaking quarantine restrictions

Two asylum-seekers on the Greek island of Lesbos were shot and injured after apparently violating coronavirus quarantine rules, officials said Thursday.